Gov. Fallin Delivers State Of The State Address

Monday is the first day of the regular legislative session. Governor Mary Fallin will present her budget proposal and deliver the State of the State address.

Monday, February 2nd 2015, 9:51 am

By: News 9


Monday is the first day of the regular legislative session. Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin presented her budget proposal and delivered the State of the State address.

Gov. Fallin began her annual state of the state speech with a moment of silence for Oklahoma Highway Patrol Troopers Nicholas Dees and Keith Burch. Dees was killed and Burch injured when they were struck by a vehicle while at the scene of a traffic accident during the weekend.

Dees and Burch were investigating a semitrailer crash near Shawnee Saturday night when they were hit while standing outside of their vehicles near Interstate 40.

Fallin called for the moment of silence at the start of her speech to a joint session of the Oklahoma House and Senate on Monday.

Fallin says partnerships between businesses and public schools can improve educational attainment in the state.

In her State of the State address Monday, Fallin said Oklahoma's workforce is not meeting the education levels needed to sustain job growth.

Fallin says in five years, studies predict only 23 percent of Oklahoma jobs will be available to those who have a high school degree or less. Today, Fallin says, 46 percent of the working population fits that description.

Fallin says lawmakers should help strengthen partnerships between businesses and local schools where students can dual track their education and work skills.

Fallin highlighted a collaborative effort between the Mid-America Industrial Park in Pryor and Mayes County schools exposes students to the job and career options available to them after graduation.

Fallin is also calling for an initiative to lower incarceration costs in the state.

In her State of the State address Monday, she said personal and community safety remain top priorities, and violent criminals will continue to be incarcerated. But one in 11 Oklahomans serve time in prison at some point in their lives and many inmates are first time, non-violent offenders with drug abuse and alcohol problems.

Fallin says Oklahoma must ramp up its "smart on crime" policies, including the Justice Reinvestment Initiative, to offer alternatives to low-risk, non-violent offenders such as drug courts, veteran's courts and mental health courts.

It costs the state around $19,000 a year to house an inmate, but $5,000 a year to send an addict through drug court and on to treatment.

Fallin has told state lawmakers that improving the health of the state's citizens should be a priority for the 2015 Legislature.

In her State of the State address Monday, Fallin said Oklahoma ranks at the top of the nation for prescription drug abuse, fourth in the nation in unintentional drug poisoning deaths, seventh-worst for obesity and the sixth-worst for smoking rates.

Fallin says there are thousands of unnecessary deaths in the state each year and billions of public and private dollars spent to treat preventable illnesses.

She says every Oklahoman can better take personal responsibility for their health. But lawmakers can pass a prescription drug monitoring bill that cracks down on the practice of "doctor shopping" and ensures that narcotics are not being prescribed to addicts.

Fallin is calling on state lawmakers to revamp the state's budgeting process.

In her State of the State address Monday, Fallin said the primary source of discretionary spending by the Legislature -- the general revenue fund -- is growing smaller. It is shrinking, both in dollars and as a percentage of overall collections, because of the increasing cost of mandatory off-the-top apportionments.

Fallin says the state's budgeting system diverts billions of dollars away from the general revenue fund before the budgeting process begins to support government programs, pay for tax credits or to fill unused revolving funds maintained by some state agencies.

Fallin says she wants to work with lawmakers to take a fresh look at the budgeting process, and to rethink how taxpayer dollars are allocated.

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